I Call BS On The Northwest Passage

A few days ago, people were trying to claim that the Northwest Passage is open. Some people might get lucky and get through the ice, but the passage is definitely not “open.”

ScreenHunter_2460 Sep. 01 18.55 ScreenHunter_2459 Sep. 01 18.54

ScreenHunter_2461 Sep. 01 20.42

About Tony Heller

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23 Responses to I Call BS On The Northwest Passage

  1. BallBounces says:

    “the Northwest Passage is open”. Posted Sept. 1, 2014, at Real Science. Bwahahahhaha!!! — Al.

  2. Fred from Canuckistan says:

    Real Science is open too.

    Open for ridicule.

  3. geran says:

    Give me that nuclear-powered icebreaker, and about a dozen cases of beer, and I could get thru.

    (Disclaimer: Not responsible for polar bears, damage to icebreaker, or reactor meltdown.)

  4. SteveS says:

    I see how it works now…Turney puts in a phone call, offering his expert antarctic experience to help “Da Boys” get thru that dang northwest passage…to make a point of course. Then, we have to rescue them when, of all the unpredictable things in nature, the wind shifts, and they are locked in ice.
    They never learn.

  5. Dave G says:

    Steve, can’t you see the ships & sailboats

  6. A. Smith says:

    If you have a nuclear ice breaker, the northwest passage is open. This doesn’t mean your logic is incorrect. The passage is full of ice. It’s just not full of ice thick enough to stop a nuclear ice breaker.

  7. Gail Combs says:

    The US navy animated map for 2014 shows the NW passage blocked too:
    http://www7320.nrlssc.navy.mil/hycomARC/navo/arcticice_nowcast_anim30d.gif

  8. Bullright says:

    Depends on what the definition of “open” IS.

  9. RobertInAz says:

    Bellot Strait was open for a few hours and a few yachts transited east to wests. As Steve said, it closed up again. They then needed the wind to push the ice west so they could dash south. Both occurred so the passage was “open” for a few hours. To transit, you had to be sitting and waiting near Ft. Ross at the eastern end of Bellot Strait.

  10. lapogus says:

    I don’t doubt that the NWP opened for a day or so – allowing 4 or 5 boats to make a dash for it. This was not sue to any rapid melt but just a change in winds, which the experienced skippers had been waiting for. It came just in the nick of time by all accounts, and some boats had already decided to give up, and head back rather than risk an over-winter.

    http://northwestpassage2014.blogspot.co.uk/

    From the S/V EMPIRICUS’s GPS tracker it does look like the Bellot Strait closed up again pretty quick, and they were lucky to get through at all. http://northwestpassage2014.blogspot.com/2014/09/sv-empiricus-makes-east-bound-transit.html

    http://northwestpassage2014.blogspot.com/2014/09/old-timer-says-if-you-are-in-passage-on.html for a summary of other boats on 1st September.

  11. bit chilly says:

    since when did transiting bellot strait constitute making a north west passage. a north west passage means transiting the arctic circle from east to west or west to east ,if that happens a north west passage has occurred.

    • nielszoo says:

      Ahh definitions. Ephemeral things in the “information” age. Remember that a million square kilometers of ice in the Arctic is “ice free” so 4 small boats dodging wind driven ice is “open for business.” It’s NewSpeak.

  12. Douglas Pohl says:

    NOW WE KNOW MORE ON YOUR PERSPECTIVE… NARROW
    Open today closed tomorrow – summer ICE MOVES according to weather… call it open or call it closed depends on the moment in time for any given location… glad to help calm your nerves.

    IF you want to worry – the Tug NORDBERG POLAR towing the pontoon salvage barge LARSEN is going to be a wintering over problem…. the tug captain does not want to navigate the shallow Gjoa Haven route and says he is waiting for Victoria to open… Victoria is not going to open in 2014 unless a BIG STORM moves through AND the tug captain gets out of Fort Ross into the western side of Bellot Strait so he can move AND IF conditions become favorable… I’d bet wintering over is now on their preparations list for staff in Cambridge Bay.

  13. stpaulchuck says:

    I bet the Russian ice breaker is warming up the crew quarters for another rescue mission to extract another load of fools from the ice.

  14. De Paus says:

    The Russian website of 9TV has this remarkable news item:

    Inhabitants of Yekaterinburg found a new tombstone in the center of their city. The monument stands in the city’s Historical Park. On the monument is an inscription to the memory of the late and misunderstood Yekaterinburg summer 2014. Already the first flowers have been placed to the monument, two cloves. While it is difficult to guess who placed this unusual momument, and why he placed it in the city, it is easier to understand why he did it. It is considered very well possible that the citizens would like to remember the past summer because it was the coldest summer of the last hundred years. The city and the surrounding region saw hurricanes, fallen trees, heavy rainfalls and flooded streets. According to Znak.com the average temperature did not exceed 12 to 16 degrees Celsius above zero. The apotheosis of the weather of last summer was the snow that fell in July near Kachnakar, a small city in the region, located about two hundred and fifty kilometers from the capital of the Ural.

    http://9tv.co.il/news/2014/09/02/184296.html

  15. RobertInAz says:

    Here is a good description of the “open” NW passage.
    http://northwestpassage2014.blogspot.ca/2014/09/sv-gjoa-section-from-their-blog-dundas.html

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